Graphs of a vs. t, v vs. t, and d vs. t ?

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Homework Help Overview

The discussion revolves around understanding the relationships between acceleration, velocity, and displacement as represented in their respective graphs over time. The original poster seeks assistance in determining the velocity vs. time and displacement vs. time graphs from a given acceleration vs. time graph.

Discussion Character

  • Exploratory, Conceptual clarification, Assumption checking

Approaches and Questions Raised

  • Participants discuss the need for additional information regarding the relationships between the variables. Some suggest using integration to derive the velocity and displacement graphs from the acceleration graph, while others emphasize the importance of understanding the basic relationships between these quantities.

Discussion Status

There is an ongoing exploration of how to approach the problem, with some participants providing insights into the relationships between the graphs. However, there is no explicit consensus on a method due to the lack of sufficient information from the original poster.

Contextual Notes

The original poster mentions that they are only provided with the acceleration vs. time graph and no equations, which raises questions about the assumptions and constraints of the problem.

IamHenry
Graphs of a vs. t, v vs. t, and d vs. t ?

Plese help !

I am given a graph of a vs. t
How do i use it to determine the other graphs:
v vs. t
d vs. t
 
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You haven't supplied enough information. What are the relationships between the variables defined by the letters a,t,v,d?
 
If you have the equations, just plug in a few points and go.

If you have one equation, you integrate to get the others... but like mathman said, you haven't given us enough information.
 
i am not given any equations
i am only given the graph of a vs. t
btw
a=acceleration
t=time
v=velocity
d=displacement
please help
thx
 
You need to use the basic relationships between the quanities.

a= dv/dt => The acceleration determines the slope of the velocity graph. So a constant acceleration line means an increasing velocity, Acceleration = 0 means a constant velocity. You must study the graphs you are given and piece together the various graphs.

Remember that v = dx/dt so you can do the same thing with the velocity line to create a displacement graph.

With that said this is off to homework.
 
v = [inte] a dt

d = [inte] d dt
 
If it's not a very screwed up graph you can write the equations just by looking at it.
 
Probably what you want for this is the fact that the integral is the area under the curve.

Given a graph for a(t), estimate the area under the curve from 0 to t for a number of different values of t. That will give the graph for v(t). It is probably enough to remember things like: if the graph of a(t) is above a=0, then v(t) is increasing, if below, then v(t) is decreasing. if the graph of a(t) is horizontal, then v(t) increases (or decreases) linearly with slope given by the a value.

Once you have a rough graph for v(t), x(t) is the area under that curve. Repeat the process to get a graph of x(t).
 

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